Hello. My Name is Taslima I was impressed when i saw your profile at maoliworld.ning.com and will like you to email me back to my in box so that i can send you my picture for you to know who i am . i believe we can establish a long lasting relationship with you. In addition,i will like you to reply me through my private email box (taslima4love_u@yahoo.com). This is because i don't know the possibilities of remaining in forum for a long time please reply me to my email OK. Thanks,waiting to hear from you soonest. Taslima.
Hey Alice if no one is keen on the panel around the book Maoli/Maori can Kealani (I haven't asked him yet) and I pinch the kaupapa and work it in with the Tamatoa visit:
In 1907 John Tamatoa Baker, a kanaka Maoli visited New Zealand. Baker was the Royal Governor of Hawaii in the time of King Kalakaua. Baker could not help but reflect on the commonalities and difference between kanaka Maoli (Hawaii) and tangata Maori (Aotearoa). A series of exchanges were published between him and the editor (Reweti Te Kohere) of the Maori language monthly newspaper, Te Pipiwharauroa. Baker also wrote long letters to the Hawaiian language weekly newspaper Ke Aloha Aina documenting his travels which took him throughout Polynesia.
Drawing on Baker’s visit, the joint presentation will foreground and reflect on the extent and implications of Maoli/Maori connections. This presentation foreshadows a series of proposed specific exchanges between Maoli and Maori scholars which stems from conversations at the last NAISA meeting at the University of Georgia. Connections between kanaka Maoli and tangata Maori have been recognised, mobilised and explored through multiple cultural, activist and scholarly exchanges. Not only do we share being far-flung Polynesians but we have also both experienced First/Fourth world Anglophone colonisation. The rich and ongoing nature of these connections demands a sustained exploration through a collaborative critical project.
Both kanaka Maoli and tangata Maori aspirations are located within a wider international context of goals and objectives similarly expressed by other Indigenous peoples. This exchange between a Maoli scholar and Maori scholar offers a further contribution to the indigenous studies field of inquiry and highlights the importance each other places on connections with the international indigenous community of scholarship and research.
Ki ora Alice,
My name is Ululani and I live on the island of Maui. It is so exciting to be able to send comments to our 'ohana in 'Aotearoa. Maybe one day we will be able to meet in person. Malama pono a hui hou. Aloha
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taslima4love_u@yahoo.com
Hello.
My Name is Taslima I was impressed when i saw your profile at maoliworld.ning.com and will like you to email me back to my in box so that i can send you my picture for you to know who i am . i believe we can establish a long lasting relationship with you. In addition,i will like you to reply me through my private email box (taslima4love_u@yahoo.com). This is because i don't know the possibilities of remaining in forum for a long time please reply me to my email OK. Thanks,waiting to hear from you soonest.
Taslima.
In 1907 John Tamatoa Baker, a kanaka Maoli visited New Zealand. Baker was the Royal Governor of Hawaii in the time of King Kalakaua. Baker could not help but reflect on the commonalities and difference between kanaka Maoli (Hawaii) and tangata Maori (Aotearoa). A series of exchanges were published between him and the editor (Reweti Te Kohere) of the Maori language monthly newspaper, Te Pipiwharauroa. Baker also wrote long letters to the Hawaiian language weekly newspaper Ke Aloha Aina documenting his travels which took him throughout Polynesia.
Drawing on Baker’s visit, the joint presentation will foreground and reflect on the extent and implications of Maoli/Maori connections. This presentation foreshadows a series of proposed specific exchanges between Maoli and Maori scholars which stems from conversations at the last NAISA meeting at the University of Georgia. Connections between kanaka Maoli and tangata Maori have been recognised, mobilised and explored through multiple cultural, activist and scholarly exchanges. Not only do we share being far-flung Polynesians but we have also both experienced First/Fourth world Anglophone colonisation. The rich and ongoing nature of these connections demands a sustained exploration through a collaborative critical project.
Both kanaka Maoli and tangata Maori aspirations are located within a wider international context of goals and objectives similarly expressed by other Indigenous peoples. This exchange between a Maoli scholar and Maori scholar offers a further contribution to the indigenous studies field of inquiry and highlights the importance each other places on connections with the international indigenous community of scholarship and research.
I Mite C Ya In Wellington 1 Day
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My name is Ululani and I live on the island of Maui. It is so exciting to be able to send comments to our 'ohana in 'Aotearoa. Maybe one day we will be able to meet in person. Malama pono a hui hou. Aloha